Flickr Censors Egypt Police Photos 163
An anonymous reader writes "Yesterday Flickr removed a photoset of Egyptian Secret Police photos which had been posted to an Egyptian journalist's Flickrstream. The photos were obtained when the journalist acquired them from what he called 'one of Mubarak's largest torture facilities.' Flickr cited the fact that the photos 'were not the user's own work' as justification for the censorship, even though Flickr staffers themselves frequently upload work that is not 'their own' to their personal photostreams."
Shame (Score:5, Interesting)
Shame on you Flickr, they're not even explicit.
Hope someone has a mirror, and this time posted elsewhere on another site. Let's not reward them with more traffic.
Re:Shame (Score:4, Insightful)
I grow tired of the evil enabled by fools. Let us together remove it, and breathe once again the fresh, honest air.
Re:Shame (Score:5, Interesting)
Shame on you Flickr....
Shame indeed. I live and work and write occasional newspaper columns in the tiny nation of Vanuatu, Last week, our Minister of Infrastructure and Public Utilities arrived in the offices of our national newspaper with a gang of 8 thugs and proceeded to beat the crap out of the publisher [aut.ac.nz]. His sin? Telling the truth about a litany of crooked dealings the Minister was involved in.
This prompted people from all walks of life in the Pacific Islands region to stand up and make themselves heard. The staff of the Daily Post newspaper - and contributors like myself [imagicity.com] - were defiant in the face of overt coercion and threats.
Why, I would like to know, is it easier for pipsqueaks like us to stand up to government coercion than for large corporations with a stable of capable lawyers on hand and not a fear in the world for their own safety?
Of course, we already know the answer.
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Why, I would like to know, is it easier for pipsqueaks like us to stand up to government coercion than for large corporations with a stable of capable lawyers on hand and not a fear in the world for their own safety? Of course, we already know the answer.
The CEOs of all of the world's great corporations are scaredy-cats?
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Why, I would like to know, is it easier for pipsqueaks like us to stand up to government coercion than for large corporations with a stable of capable lawyers on hand and not a fear in the world for their own safety? Of course, we already know the answer.
The CEOs of all of the world's great corporations are scaredy-cats?
Well, not to put too fine a point on it: Yes.
The column I wrote on the topic (and linked above) makes pretty much exactly this point. Once introduced to the corridors of power, people suddenly become controlled by their fear of being cast out again. This explains the corrupting influence of both Washington and Wall St.
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I think what the earlier poster meant by "Of course, we already know the answer." was "Greed"
I was being both facetious and amusing myself in choosing a descriptor that would infuriate the typical modern American CEO. Although there are exceptions to every rule, I'd have to sum it up:
Human
+ Greed
+ Lust (for power; for control, for dominance in the game of sexes)
--------------
Wannabe CEO
- Ethics
- Morality
- Empathy
--------------
CEO
And the calculation that creates far too many of the subspecies known as the modern CEO occurs in pretty much that order. Me, I point to Al "Chainsaw" Dunlap and G
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The more you have to lose , the more vulnerable you are.
The government is not going to concern itself about us : we are not worth the effort : to many of us , and there's not much we can do to the government anyway
Corporations, however , can do much more , but they can be taken down very easily by governments.
Whether the governments control the corporations , or the corporations control the governments , doesn't matter much : the end result is that they will work together , as this is much more profitable
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Re:Shame (Score:4, Informative)
Congratulations. You've just defined the Streisand Effect [wikipedia.org].
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Has mainstream media picked up on this? Scoop [scoop.co.nz] might be interested...
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let us switch to more ethic sites. (Score:2)
IPernity is a community-oriented photo-sharing site, with an interface similar to the original flickr interface.
Here is a Monkeygrease script to automatically import your flickr photos to Ipernity
https://www.ipernity.com/apps/gm [ipernity.com]
I am uploading my new photos to both site, and when Ipernity community is large enough, I will definitely close my Flickr account.
Tough call actually (Score:1)
It's hard to comment without knowing what we're talking about. If those were pictures of people being tortured, then if you were one of those people would you want your suffering and humiliation shown around the world? There are ways of getting the word out without harming the torture victims again.
On the other hand if the faces were blurred, or the photos were just of implements of torture, than I don't see the need to remove them.
Re:Tough call actually (Score:5, Informative)
No, they weren't torture photos. Some were photos of empty jail cells, some photos of bags of shredded documents, others were stacks of VHS tapes with some 'explicit' Arabic writing (they had sex tapes of some Egyptian and foreign celebs, likely as blackmail). I'd show you, but of course they're down. I'm sure some news articles and twitter posts mirrored a few of them.
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"I'd show you, but of course they're down."
Nothing on the intartubez is ever lost - or that's what I've heard. I'll bet some geek or another saved all the good stuff, and he's busy putting it back up somewhere. If I were interested enough, I'd Google around - alas - I only read the summary to get an idea what the censorship was about. As usual, it's a story about corporate douches lacking balls. Phht. Nothing new here.
Re:Tough call actually (Score:5, Informative)
Quite right. Gawker has some [gawker.com]
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It's hard to comment without knowing what we're talking about. If those were pictures of people being tortured, then if you were one of those people would you want your suffering and humiliation shown around the world? There are ways of getting the word out without harming the torture victims again.
On the other hand if the faces were blurred, or the photos were just of implements of torture, than I don't see the need to remove them.
They were photos of the torturers themselves [arabawy.org]. All you had to do was visit the guy's site to find this out. But now that you know, how tough does the call feel to you?
Re:Tough call actually (Score:5, Interesting)
Actually, putting up photos of torturers has ethical problems that are just as bad, Saying "this guy is a torturer" and spreading it around the world is like saying "this guy is a terrorist" or "this guy is a pedophile" and spreading it around the world. It's not as if Flickr has any reason to trust a random guy off the street accusing a third party of a serious crime.
If I posted a picture of you and said "my neighbor is a terrorist", shouldn't you hope that Flickr would remove it?
(And if you say, well, these guys really are torturers, but you aren't really a terrorist, tell me how Flickr is supposed to know that?)
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Not if it's a photo of me wearing a bomb vest.
Okay, jokes aside: They should not touch the photo until my lawyer has got the proper clearance from a court of law to force its removal. I'll need the evidence at the libel trial.
See, the problem is that I don't want Flickr to apply its own arbitrary sense of what is moral/ethical and what isn't - at least, not beyond a few basic unavoidable commun
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It'd be funny if they just removed his pix because of assuming the name "SS DVD" implied he'd ripped them from a DVD.
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If those were pictures of people being tortured, then if you were one of those people would you want your suffering and humiliation shown around the world?
Of course!
How many services are this misguided lately? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Pick one. Destroy them. Let the rest learn from the example. We can most certainly do this.
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They are also the largest and most heavily entrenched, making them the hardest to damage with a boycott. Start with something smaller, then work your way up....
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:How many services are this misguided lately? (Score:4, Funny)
I dunno. Live in a particularly nice cave and you might be good for a reality tv show.
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Scene: A cloud against a blue sky background. A yellow title emerges from the cloud.
Cue vocals: "The Bin-Laaaa-dennnns"
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Damn, Damn, damn. Posting to undo the redundant mod. I meant to mod you Insightful.
Sorry, I need to get some sleep.
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WTF am I doing replying to an AC at 5 A.M on a Friday night?
5 AM is no longer night time.
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Boycotts are no longer enough. A few corporations will have to be wiped out before they get the point.
Remember too, rotten morally bankrupt corporations are run by rotten morally bankrupt CEOs. Be sure the boycotts follow them when they move on.
Not censorship, clear TOS violation (Score:5, Insightful)
Flickr is very clear that you are sharing your OWN WORK. These are images taken by someone else.
Regardless of how you feel about breaking into government files and sharing things you find there, a place like Flickr with a very clear TOS about not publishing other people's work has every right, and should be expected to take these things down. Flickr is not Wikileaks. Find somewhere else to put the images.
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Oh, I see (Score:2)
So just because a corporation's terms of service were allegedly violated means it's not censorship to take down someone's speech. Particularly as it pertains to a government.
Okay.
You don't have free speech on a corporate website (Score:2, Interesting)
Here's reality, you don't have free speech rights on some corporation's website. If you want to host your own site and put your free speech up there, don't think anyone's going to interfere.
This could have been handled a bit more gracefully. I am defending the right for an individual or business to be able to dictate the terms of content that is hosted or stored on their property. Call it whatever you want. There's a multitude of sites that will host those images no questions asked. So, why not do it?
Flickr pulled a dick move (Score:4, Interesting)
You're the one who brought up free speech, not me.
Their policy might be fine when it comes to actual creative works. Deleting pictures like these based on the justification that you must upload your own work is valuing the letter of the rule above its spirit.
They will now get the backlash they deserve.
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Ah, so if I taped the photos all over your car, you'd be obligated to keep them there permanently? After all, removing them would VIOLATE MY FREE SPEECH AMENDMENTS! OMG YOU CENSORIAL WHORESON!
If I had a dollar for every libertard who though that freedom meant "I can do anything I want and everyone else must bend to my desires"...
lol libertard (Score:2)
Come back when you can provide an argument that doesn't rely on personal attacks for support. Or at least don't randomly throw epithets at people about whom you know nothing.
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Censorship is an attempt by a controlling body to actually prevent information from reaching the public. If Flickr broke into the guy's house and stole his originals, or contacted the operators of every other file hosting service and threatened to break their legs if they put the images up, then Flickr would be censoring this guy.
But they aren't doing that. They're just choosing what goes on their own web site, and in this case enforcing their own TOS. Was it a bad decision? I'd say so. Was it censorship?
Re:lol libertard (Score:5, Insightful)
What happened here is censorship. What you describe is merely legal censorship. Because it is legal, it dont mean it is the right thing to do.
There is no recourse against legal corportate censorship. But peoples are free to complain and presure them anyway they see fit. Bloging, writing articles, posting comments are all acceptable way for the public to communicate its disagrement. It is up to them to see if, considering the shitstorm, that unpopular move was worth it.
No one sued Flickr over some "VIOLATE MY FREE SPEECH AMENDMENTS! OMG!" claim, WTF is your problem?
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I agree with everyone that this was a bad decision on Flickr's part. I'm simply trying to point out that calling it "censorship"—or just claiming that Flickr had no right to remove the pictures—is pure sensationalism. For something to be "censored", it has to be blocked by an entity or group that has control over (a) the content, (b) the distribution network, or (c) the audience. Flickr has none of these things. The owner of the images can take them anywhere else.
Now, if every major hosting site
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> Censorship is an attempt by a controlling body to actually prevent information from reaching the public.
Your definition of censorship happens to differ from mine. If someone with power (Flickr) blocks the speech or expression of someone relatively without power (a random Flickr user), it is censorship.
Also, this is the second time I have to tell you this: I made no claim of being libertarian, so the final paragraph of your post is either a very misguided personal attack or a completely off-topic angry
Utterly wrong. Utterly. (Score:2)
If someone with power (Flickr) blocks the speech or expression of someone relatively without power (a random Flickr user), it is censorship.
That is without doubt the stupidest thing that has even been typed.
It is the most completely bone-headed comment I have ever seen in many years of internet use, that reflects an astounding disconnect from reality in any form as we know it.
I would say it's a troll, except that you obviously believe this.
Get used to disappointment in life if you think a place run by a pri
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Sorry, but you just assume that your "freedom means freedom to enslave" is the correct definition of freedom, analogous to the BSD vs GPL debate on freedom.
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Come back when you can provide an argument that doesn't rely on personal attacks for support.
Actually he relied on very clear points for support, and then threw in the personal attacks as a bonus.
In his defense, you are rather stupid on this subject, and totally lacking in understanding about what public speech is and what Flickr posts are in relation to that. So basically he had you pegged there,
Ad hominem (Score:2)
His points were not clear. He misrepresented my position with exaggeration, hyperbole, and caps lock. Then, rather than offering counterarguments, he insulted me (albeit inaccurately, as I am not libertarian). The personal attacks are not a "bonus" - they do not contribute anything meaningful to the discussion. Posts like that are what the Troll mod is for.
Additionally, the fact that I disagree with you does not make me stupid, and does not mean I lack understanding on this subject (such a premise assumes y
Re:Oh, I see (Score:4, Insightful)
Flickr isn't part of any government, and I see nothing that suggests they took the photos down under the orders of one. So, dick move? yeah, reprehensible? sure, but censorship? not really.
Re:Oh, I see (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Oh, I see (Score:4, Informative)
Because the censorship covered by the First Amendment deals only with the Government.
Your right of free speech does not imply that any third party has a duty to help you spread it. E.g. Hustler can print porn but Wal-mart are free to choose not to sell it.
Private censorship (Score:3)
If you are invited by a private party to speak or otherwise express yourself, and your speech or form of expression is removed after the fact due to its contents, this is censorship.
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Even if you ware told (in writing) what the rules for that party was? You could have gone to a different party even though the "restricted" one was more popular.
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The unintended consequences of privatization (Score:3)
Exactly. In the US, Republicans and Democrats alike have embraced outsourcing of government services to private companies as a means of saving money.
But what we've lost as a result is accountability, regulation and Redress. No one seems to have considered the consequences of splitting up the Public Square into a million little private squares, each setting its own rules and standards. Or, perhaps, they have considered th
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Because the censorship covered by the First Amendment deals only with the Government. Your right of free speech does not imply that any third party has a duty to help you spread it. E.g. Hustler can print porn but Wal-mart are free to choose not to sell it.
I get what you're saying, that the first amendment doesn't cover censorship by private citizens, but that doesn't have anything to do with my post.
You seem to be saying that private citizens cannot be censors, and that only when governments remove or alter material is that considered censorship. This is an incorrect definition, and you can see that for yourself by looking the word up.
There's nothing to argue about here. You can either look the word up in a dictionary and admit that you were wrong or go s
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I read somewhere that in China there's a law to throw you in jail for anything you could possibly do. None are enforced and repression systematically turns a blind eye on all; while conveniently taking note - just in case they need to nail you sometime later.
This works well because it lets those in power give an impression of freedom, sometimes even showing off to westerners how all this chatter about human rights violations in China is just opposition propaga
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Rat's ass. TOS's are very often stupid and overly restrictive. Some idiot typed up what he thought was a good TOS, a committee was appointed to approve it, and this is what you get. If my wife takes a photo of our grandchild, and I post it - the photo will be taken down because it's not my own work? How freaking STUPID!!!
Re:Not censorship, clear TOS violation (Score:5, Insightful)
You're being disingenuous. They would never take down a photo in a situation as you described. They don't normally take down people's stuff that isn't their own anyway, because no one complains about it. They only look into these situations if they get complaints (typically), and usually those complaints are from the copyright holder. Presumably, your wife wouldn't complain to flickr if you posted her photo to your account.
Seriously, flickr is not the place to host the photos you found on a CD you stole from the secret service headquarters. Flickr is not Wikileaks and doesn't want to get involved in that sort of thing. Flickr regularly takes down photos that are "stolen" in the sense of being blatant copyright infringement. In this case it's both copyright infringement and legitimate theft.
Flickr *does not* remove politically charged, graphic (sex and/or violence), etc. images, either - they're neutral on such issues. You can find tons of stuff like that on flickr, including photos from protests around the world showing government officials committing crimes and violent acts against unarmed citizens (as an example). But typically you should have taken those photos yourself, or gotten permission, before posting them to flickr.
As for the examples in the second FA of a flickr staff member posting things that aren't his own work - they're a huge stretch. It's FUD.
Cite? (Score:2)
> As for the examples in the second FA of a flickr staff member posting things that aren't his own work - they're a huge stretch. It's FUD.
How do you know?
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You can refuse service to anyone for any reason. However, you may not lie about the reason. If they have any employees (and from the posts here, there have been confirmed cases of that being done) that do it and don't have the images pulled, then they are selectively enforcing a rule. That's not a crime, but it is the basis for an actionable tort.
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No matter what a government may claim, every thing it does is owned by the people it governs (and most certainly by the people it taxed). The people of Egypt are sharing their own works.
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(1) Reporting is arguably a special case that wasn't taken into account in the TOS. Maybe a reporter posting a photo given to him by a source isn't posting his "own work", but it's really a different case than if he took somebody else's photo and posted it without permission.
(2) Just because a company's TOS says you can't do "X", doesn't mean it is *obligated* to take action against "X" where there is reasonable justification for a user doing "X".
(3) A service has a right to protect itself from legal probl
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I have doubts that the person who took the pictures (assuming the uploader is not the same person) is going to file a copyright claim against Flickr for hosting the images without his or her permission.
Flickr made an internal decision to take these images down. Considering what they are images of, this was a politically unwise move.
Nice FUD, though.
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"Ripped off", he says (Score:5, Insightful)
This is what happens when you love rule of law so much that you follow laws, rules, policies, terms of service, and end user license agreements over basic ethics.
Whether or not Flickr is justified in removing the images at all, the manner in which they did it is unacceptable. It would be very easy to accuse them of using their TOS (their rule of law) to hide behind the fact that they just don't like the content of the photos themselves.
As TFA points out, this is selective enforcement.
Re:"Ripped off", he says (Score:4, Interesting)
As TFA points out, this is selective enforcement
And the selection criteria is: the infringing posts were very high profile. It rises to the level of being noticed by not just a few people following some guy's Flickr stream, but by possibly very large numbers of people.
Double standard (Score:2)
If Flickr honestly cared about upholding this policy, would they not take down every instance of its violation they found, rather than only going after the low-hanging fruit?
Flickr staff members often upload content that is not, by strict definition, their original work. They may be justified in doing so as it is their service, but not abiding by your own rules undermines your authority to enforce those rules on others.
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If you read TFA's links, you'll find that Flickr's founder is among the members of staff documentably out of compliance with this policy.
By the way, "infringing" is not the same as "non-first-party" -- plenty of things are the latter but not the former: Cases where permission is granted are the most obvious (presumably, the cases where Flickr's founder posted photos with metadata indicating them to be taken by someone else fall into this category) -- and even were such permission not granted, the Egypt scen
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I agree, no law should be absolute. They codify acceptable behavior in common circumstances, but fail to properly address the extreme ones. A common problem exists in physics...
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This is what happens when you love rule of law so much that you follow laws, rules, policies, terms of service, and end user license agreements over basic ethics.
Actually this is just the opposite - as the submitter pointed out, Flickr's enforcement is arbitrary. That makes it a standard rule of man fubar, just masquerading as rule of law.
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It's about knowing that highly visible, talked-about, and linked-to material on their site is ripped off,
"Ripped off"??? The torturers weren't selling the photos and lost a potential sale. They were government servants; in some countries these photos would be public domain.
Flickr should have waited until they received an official complaint from the Egyptian government. If that's what they did get, they should say so.
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Sadly, I'm not surprised you've been modded down to 0 -- nobody is allowed to criticise WikiLeaks here. And just look at the front page of WIkiLeaks with Julian's ugly mug staring at you in the banner. I mean, seriously? They've sunk to a new low.
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Or it could be he got modded "Off Topic" because his post is, you know, completely OT. "Troll" or "Flamebait" would also have been appropriate (for your post as well).
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I get the feeling that this decision wasn't made by someone high up in the Flickr food chain. Someone higher up would have looked at it and thought "we can benefit from the positive publicity of this like Facebook and Twitter did, or we can quash this and look like cowardly ass-lickers of a regime isn't even in power anymore", and then made the obvious choice.
My own only concern is for the dignity of the torture victims. If I'd been in those chambers, I don't think I would want photos of my agonies being
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You wouldn't? Even though it would serve the cause of bringing down those who are causing that suffering? (ignoring that there aren't actually any victims in these photos)
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You idiot, I'm not saying they shouldn't be seen, just that Flickr is the wrong place to put these. It's not Flickr's job to share random photos from other people, there are plenty of other places you can go for that.
Flickr is not CENSORING them, if you can get that through your thick head (doubtful).
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People who say this clearly don't actually use flickr. Most of the content on there is actually the users' own work. Most people actually use it for its intended purpose (sharing your own photos).
That's not to say there aren't a significant amount of users posting other people's stuff, but it's easily under 5%, and most of it is mundane or innocuous (such as re-posting random photos of girls they probably got from 4chan or wherever else you might find random photos of girls).
Typically flickr doesn't take ac
Photos have been republished (Score:5, Informative)
Not censorship (Score:3)
This is not censorship. Flickr is not saying that they (users) can't host the photos anywhere; they're just saying that, for whatever reason, these photos are not welcome on Flickr.
When we throw words like "censorship" around willy-nilly, we weaken the real meaning of the word.
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What a coward you are (Score:2)
No it isn't censorship if I ban you from posting on my commercial service because any other commercial service is still available to you. Oh they censor too? Not my problem.
you are the kind of person who thinks signs like "Geine Juden" or "Whites only" are perfectly okay because they can go somewhere else don't they? You disgust me.
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He didn't say it was a good thing. He's saying it can't be called censorship. Censorship is an organized attempt to entirely prevent certain content from reaching the public. You shouldn't refer to one single media outlet's independent actions as "censorship", just like you shouldn't refer to one single bastard's hate crime as "genocide". Doing so promotes sensationalism and is disrespectful of the real victims of censorship (or genocide).
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In two minds about this. (Score:2)
On the one hand, journalists have a responsibility to report the truth (even if they rarely do) especially in matters of corruption. On the other hand, they also have a responsibility to the public interest (even if they usually ignore it) and tensions in Egypt are sky-high right now.
It is right and proper that the public have evidence of torture by the former Secret Police, and that documents are being destroyed, as this puts pressure on the military there to crack down a bit harder on said Secret Police.
Fortunately.... (Score:2)
http://anonymiss.imgur.com/ [imgur.com]
http://ge.tt/4LaxiU0 [ge.tt]
http://cryptome.org/info/eg-ss/eg-ss-01.htm [cryptome.org]
The dude behind this is one of the main voiced of the Egyptian revolution. History will not look kindly upon Flickr for their cowardice here.
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I think you just misspelled "stupid."
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Yes, it is possible [gawker.com].
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Yes:
http://gawker.com/#!5777531/inside-an-egyptian-torture-center/gallery/9 [gawker.com]
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Before going ballistic, please read the entire post.
Flickr is a private company.Thus, they are entitled to have their own TOS providing it does not violate the law.
If one of these terms are "You are only allowed to upload your own material, i.e. material created by you or which you solely hold the copyright for." so be it.
These two things are not related. Flickr is a private company and allowed to do more or less what they want. We are private people and allowed to go ballistic about more or less what we want. When Flickr turns out to be supporting torturers then we will go ballistic.
The fact that these terms of service were there in advance is no excuse they are able to change those terms of service at any time if they want. There is also no magical obligation on them to enforce their TOS so they can make a temporary
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A private company offers a service. Users use it. The users then starts using the service for a political agenda. The company removes the content referring to their TOS. I really cannot see the right of the users to complain.
The right to complain comes from the fundamental right called "freedom of speech" which means that, except where it interfere's with other people's fundamental rights, such as "privacy" you should be allowed to say what you want. Including complaining.
The justification for complaining comes from the fact that services such as Flikr rely on the freedoms of the modern world and our systems of justice in order to exist. These freedoms were hard fought for. Companies which do not do their little bit for t